Orange juice futures slump following Brazil tariff exemption
MACHIKA SUZUKI
TOKYO -- Orange juice prices fell sharply in the futures market following the news that the product will be exempted from tariffs placed on Brazil.
Futures for frozen and concentrated orange juice at one point dropped 9% to 246.70 cents per pound during Thursday's session on the Intercontinental Exchange.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Nikkei Asia
6 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Big tech is expanding in Taiwan, but may not aid Taipei in a crisis
An Apple store, seen from the Taipei 101 observatory. While several U.S. tech giants, including Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Apple, have expanded their presence on the island in recent years, their local footprints remain relatively modest. © Reuters Sam Bresnick is a research fellow and an Andrew W. Marshall fellow at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET).


The Mainichi
6 hours ago
- The Mainichi
N. Korea's Kim orders freight station construction near China border
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has ordered the construction of a freight station near the Chinese border to support a large-scale greenhouse farm project in the northwest, state-run media reported Saturday. Coming at a time when North Korea has been bolstering military and economic ties with Russia, particularly since Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, observers are watching whether the move could lead to an uptick in trade with its traditional ally China, which has recently been sluggish. Kim visited the region around Sinuiju on Friday, where severe flooding occurred in July 2024 after the Yalu River, which runs along the border with China, overflowed, according to the Korean Central News Agency. While inspecting embankment and farm construction, Kim called for the creation of a "comprehensive transport center" with a new vegetable storehouse and processing facilities built around it, the official news agency said. The area around the Yalu River has long been prone to flooding during heavy rains, with widespread damage reported last year. But with residential buildings reportedly swiftly rebuilt, Kim was quoted as saying such flood damage, once seen as inevitable, has "became a past story." Beijing is viewed as Pyongyang's closest and most influential ally in economic terms. But China's trade with North Korea in 2024 fell 5 percent from the previous year to about $2 billion, official data showed earlier this year, as bilateral trade lost momentum despite Beijing and Pyongyang marking the 75th anniversary of diplomatic relations.


The Mainichi
8 hours ago
- The Mainichi
'Speaking' tactile sidewalks enrich lives of visually impaired in Japan
KANAZAWA, Japan (Kyodo) -- Tactile paving for people with visual impairments in Japan has recently been enhanced with audio guidance, as the developers of the technology aim to improve the lives of people with partial sight and assist sighted tourists. The new braille blocks are marked with black stickers in special patterns. By scanning the coded blocks with a smartphone camera and app, users can listen to audio information about the location and its surroundings. "There is a zone where people can enjoy the smells of earth and young green leaves on the right side, about 2 meters ahead," a voice from a smartphone said as Ikuko Kawaguchi tried the system in a trial held in Kawasaki, near Tokyo, in April. "I'm excited that I can visualize the scenes," said the visually impaired 61-year-old, adding, "The system encourages me to go out alone." The system was jointly developed by the laboratory of Kanazawa Institute of Technology professor Kunio Matsui and Tokyo-based W&M systems LLC. Those behind the technology hope it can also be made available to tourists and foreigners as they walk the streets of Japan, whether they are sighted or not. The special braille blocks were first introduced in Kanazawa, central Japan, in 2019 and have since been installed in other areas, appearing at train stations, pedestrian streets and public offices in 10 prefectures, including Tokyo and Osaka, as of April. The developers plan to make the system available in multiple languages and are considering enabling it to answer questions by incorporating generative artificial intelligence capabilities. "We want more people to understand the importance of braille blocks as we enhance their functions and expand their use," Matsui said.